The annual Robert G. McGruder Distinguished Lecture and Awards Program honors and celebrates two individuals who express a passion and do above-and-beyond work to exemplify diversity in the journalism field.
Named after Robert G. McGruder, a Kent State alumnus and trailblazer in diversifying journalism, the event returned after a pandemic hiatus on Oct. 12, 2022, and honored two distinguished professionals in the field.
Maurice Newman, president of NorthCoast Media and FilmGroup Inc., received the Diversity in Media Distinguished Leadership Award.
Newman has frequently partnered with Media and Journalism Professors Thor Wasbotten and Eugene Shelton to introduce high school students in underserved communities to journalism, guiding them to an understanding of what they can do in their current schools and beyond.
鈥淭his generation, if given the tools, is the generation that I think will probably end things like poverty, illiteracy, racism and climate (injustice),鈥 Newman said.
WKYC鈥檚 Director of Advocacy and Community Initiatives Margaret Bernstein received the 2022 McGruder Distinguished Lecture Award and delivered the keynote speech.
鈥淲hen I got the email that I had won this award, I was flabbergasted,鈥 Bernstein said. 鈥淏ut I immediately typed into my reply, 鈥業 stand for diversity.鈥 I know Bob McGruder and I know his quote. I am very clear on the fact that I鈥檓 walking in the footsteps of a giant.鈥
Robert McGruder, the namesake of the awards program and lecture series, has a rich legacy that includes being the first Black editor of the Daily Kent Stater, the first Black reporter at the Plain Dealer, the first Black president of the Associated Press Managing Editors Group and the first Black Executive editor at the Detroit Free Press. He died in 2002.
Bernstein worked at the Plain Dealer three years after McGruder left to go work for the Detroit Free Press. She knows his famous quote by heart and recited it to the audience to emphasize the meaning of his legacy.
鈥淧lease know that I stand for diversity,鈥 McGruder said. 鈥淚 represent diversity. I am the messenger and the message of diversity.鈥
Before coming to WKYC-TV, Bernstein worked for the L.A. Times in the circulation department, asking people to sign up for subscriptions.
鈥淚 remember being instructed by the bosses that if anyone called from the ZIP code 90220, that we were to tell them we did not offer delivery to that ZIP code,鈥 Bernstein said. 鈥90220 was and still is the ZIP code for Compton, a black and largely poor community southeast of Los Angeles.鈥
While her family didn鈥檛 live in Compton, her dad worked there, and Bernstein said the L.A. Times couldn鈥檛 have had a more loyal reader than her father.
鈥淭he L.A. Times was a big part of our ritual as a family, as a Black family,鈥 Bernstein said. 鈥淚鈥檓 sure it鈥檚 the big reason why I allowed myself to dream of a career in this field.鈥
Bernstein said it took her years to find her voice to challenge the policies based in systemic racism. In her speech, she spoke of the act of journalism in May 2020 by Darnella Frazier, who filmed George Floyd鈥檚 murder by Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin.
鈥(Frazier) uploaded it to Facebook, and our world changed,鈥 Bernstein said. 鈥淟et鈥檚 just spend a moment thinking about all the social change that has happened as a result of this 17-year-old鈥檚 act of journalism.鈥
In the wake of George Floyd鈥檚 death, Black-owned businesses became an 鈥渦nexpected trend鈥 in media coverage. Bernstein spoke of a Black entrepreneur in Salt Lake City, known for her art and Baklava, who saw a 鈥渢idal wave鈥 of interest in her shop.
The baker was featured in her local media, and then and she received orders from all around the country.
鈥淭hat is the power we wield in this field,鈥 Bernstein said. 鈥淢y journey in journalism has always pointed me in the direction of diversity, equity and inclusion 鈥 I鈥檓 sure a lot of it had to do with me starting out my career at a Black newspaper.鈥